Saint Athanasius, the Father of Orthodoxy
By F. A. Forbes
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Saint Athanasius, the Father of Orthodoxy - F. A. Forbes
F. A. Forbes
Saint Athanasius, the Father of Orthodoxy
EAN 8596547253440
DigiCat, 2022
Contact: DigiCat@okpublishing.info
Table of Contents
SAINT ATHANASIUS
Chapter 1. A FORESHADOWING
Chapter 2. ARIUS THE HERESIARCH
Chapter 3. THE GREAT COUNCIL
Chapter 4. THE CALM BEFORE THE STORM
Chapter 5. FALSE WITNESSES
Chapter 6. A ROYAL-HEARTED EXILE
Chapter 7. THE DAY OF REJOICING
Chapter 8. THE INVISIBLE PATRIARCH
Chapter 9. A SHORT-LIVED PEACE
Chapter 10. THE LAST EXILE
Chapter 11. THE TRUCE OF GOD
SAINT ATHANASIUS
Table of Contents
I and the Father are one.
—Words of Our Lord (John 10:30)
Chapter 1 A FORESHADOWING
Table of Contents
THE Patriarch of Alexandria, Egypt was expecting company. He stood at the window of his palace looking down the long road, that at the first sign of his guests' arrival he might go forth and welcome them. Before him, like a white pearl in the blue waters of the Mediterranean, lay the city of Alexandria—the beautiful,
as men loved to call it. Across the harbor the marble tower of the great lighthouse soared up into the clear Eastern sky, white as the white cliffs of the Island of Pharos from which it sprang. It was noonday, and the sunshine lay like a veil of gold over all.
The Patriarch's thoughts were wandering in the past. He had been celebrating the anniversary of his holy predecessor Peter, the previous Bishop, who had won the crown of martyrdom during the terrible persecution of the Christians not so many years before. Several of the clergy present had come from afar to assist at the festival, and these were to be his expected guests.
The time of suffering was past and over, and yet it seemed to Alexander as if it had all happened yesterday and might happen again tomorrow. There stood the great palace of the Caesars, where the pagan emperor had sat in judgment upon the lambs of Christ's flock; there the famous temple of Serapis, where the Christians had been dragged to offer incense to the gods; there the amphitheater where they had been torn to pieces by beasts and slain with the sword for confessing the Name of Christ. And all through those dark days, firm and steadfast as the lighthouse on the cliffs of Pharos, had stood the Patriarch Peter, a tower of strength and comfort to his persecuted children.
A hundred Bishops and more had looked to him as their head, for the See of Alexandria in the East was second only to that of Rome in the West, and the burden of responsibility was heavy. But, thanks to the example of its chief, the Church in Egypt had borne the trial bravely, and if some had quailed before the torture and the rack and had fallen away, by far the greater number had been true. Even the unheroic souls, who had loved their lives better than their God, had not been lost beyond hope, for they had come back during the lulls in the storm, begging to be absolved from their sin. And Peter, mindful of his Master's words that he should not quench the smoking flax nor break the bruised reed, received them back, after they had done penance, into the fold of Christ with mercy and compassion.
There were some who had not scrupled to protest against such mercy. Were these apostates,
cried Meletius, Bishop of Lykopolis, to be made equal to those who had borne the burden and the heat of the day?
And he had rebelled against the decision of the Patriarch and made a schism in the Church. Even the martyrdom of the holy Peter had not brought him back to his allegiance: the Meletians were rebels still, to the crying scandal of Christians and pagans alike.
They were a hard people to govern, these Alexandrians—subtle, passionate and unstable, ready to follow any preacher of novelties. Alexander half envied Peter his martyr's crown as he stood musing over the past.
What was delaying his guests? he wondered, as he looked down the long road, where there was as yet no sign of them.
On the shore, at a little distance, a group of boys were playing, their bare legs and white tunics flashing hither and thither as they ran. One of them, a tall slim lad, whose aureole of ruddy hair seemed to catch every wandering sunbeam, was evidently directing the game, for all seemed to look to him for orders. A leader of men,
smiled the Patriarch to himself, as a vigorous wave of the boy's hand brought all his companions round him.
They were building some kind of a platform now, on to which he of the ruddy locks was promptly hoisted, while the others appeared to be forming a procession.
A church ceremony,
murmured the Patriarch to himself, remembering his own boyhood days. Presently a little boy advanced solemnly and presented some kind of a vessel to the youthful bishop, who, with a magnificent gesture, beckoned to the procession to approach. Then, as the foremost boy advanced and knelt at his feet, he raised the vessel and poured some of its contents over his head.
The baptism of the catechumens!
exclaimed the Patriarch; but this looks a good deal too much like earnest!
Hastily calling a servant, he bade him go down to the shore and bring up the band of boys who were playing there. Summoned thus hastily to appear before authority, they approached with some uneasiness, and there was a certain amount of scuffling among them which resulted in the appearance of the would-be bishop in the forefront of the group—and where should a bishop be if not at the head of his flock?
What were you doing down there on the shore?
asked the Patriarch.
The boy's clear eyes looked at him with interest, but without a vestige of fear.
We were playing,
he said. "It was the baptism of the catechumens. I was the bishop, and